https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6znwoR7IIU
I'm excited to share Part Two of my visit to Vashon Island and introduce you to Halee Dams of Marmol Farm. Halee describes herself as a small-scale grower who uses organic and earth-friendly practices.
Marmol Farm's Hallee Dams with her flowers
She has a farm stand and a flower truck and she supplies private customers and Island shoppers through a retail partner on Vashon Island. The name Marmol Farm comes from Halee's great-grandparents Agnes and Martin Marmol. They were dairy farmers in Canada (where she's from) and she likes to think they’re the inspiration for her love of farming.
My visit to Marmol Farm, where Halee Dams and her son Russell welcomed me on a recent September morning
Halee is also a mother to two-year-old Russell and a palliative care social worker. She's balancing quite a lot and I know many of you can relate to the demands of trying to do it all well. I found Halee's attitude refreshing as we discussed the so-called work-life balance (does that really exist?). Anyone who's flower farming as a side hustle or while also raising children will definitely related to her story!
The tiny flower farmstand at Marmol Farm in the Dockton community on Vashon Island
Rosie, the flower truck, which will soon appear at flower pop-ups with Halee -- both on Vashon Island and in the greater Seattle area
Last week I visited Vashon Island, Washington and featured Part One of my two-part series about island flower farming with Alyssa O'Sullivan of Sweet Alyssum Farm. You can check out that episode here.
Dried flowers, grown and preserved by Halee for a wedding she recently designed
The wedding -- Halee's first! Designed for friends who wed in Stehekin, a remote community in Central Washington reached only by a ferry boat
Here's more about Halee: By training, she is a social worker whose career has mostly been involved in hospice and inpatient palliative medicine. These days, she combines social work with parenting a 2-year-old-son.
Halee believes in local, sustainable flowers and is proudly floral-foam free. she is a member of Slow Flowers, and tries to grow her flowers in a way that is regenerative to the earth. Marmol Farm is a certified wildlife habitat and Halee is an ambassador of the Growing Kindness Project.
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Thank you so much for joining us today. I'd love to hear from you about the addition of video interviews to the Slow Flowers Podcast. My visit to meet Halee Dam on her farm is the eighth video "Vodcast" and I've learned a lot about how to produce, record and share content with you in a new way! But I'm eager for feedback, so please post a comment in the show notes or shoot me an email at debra@slowflowers.com. I hope to hear from you!
Channel Your Inner Fashionista
I want to remind you that it's time to apply to create a botanical couture look for American Flowers Week 2022!
Slow Flowers will Commission at least FIVE Floral Couture Looks for our 2022 American Flowers Week Collection. We’re soliciting proposals from farmer-florist creative teams for this campaign. Those submitting must be active Slow Flowers members. Consideration will be made for specific new regions and botanical elements not previously featured. We have special focus on inclusion and representation! The selected Botanical Couture fashions will be published in our 2022 Summer Issue of Slow Flowers Journal.
For the 2022 Application, you will be asked to submit a Mood Board or Pinterest Board to express your concept. You will also be asked to write a description of your construction methods and mechanics to be used. This is all to ensure that you will be able to execute the design for photography and publication. Please reach out to debra@slowflowers.com with any questions. As a bonus, we recorded a webinar earlier this year with tips and techniques shared by p...